This
Film is Not Yet Rated (2006)
Rated NC17
Starring: Kirby Dick, Becky Altringer, and
Lindsey Howell
Rating:

out
of

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If
you've gone to a movie since 1968, you've dealt with the MPAA's rating
system. Established
to "prevent censorship," the rating system devised by the MPAA (Motion
Picture Association of America) is supposed to provide parents with information
so
that they can make informed decisions about what movies they let their
children see. What has happened, by and large, is that the MPAA has been
given carte blanche to impose their own form of censorship on films through
their "voluntary" ratings system.Filmmaker
Kirby Dick decided to take a look into the MPAA and their unusual practice
of keeping secret the names of those who actually rate the movies. The
result is This Film is Not Yet Rated, an eye-opening
documentary about the MPAA's inconsistencies.
Using
interviews with filmmakers who've had to deal with the MPAA giving them
the dreaded "NC17" rating, like John Waters (A
Dirty Shame),
Kevin Smith (Clerks),
Kimberly Peirce (Boys Don't Cry), Wayne Kramer (The Cooler),
Matt Stone (Team America: World Police) and Atom Egoyan (Where
the Truth Lies), Dick examines how the MPAA does their work behind
closed doors with little to no accountability.
As
one example,
despite their claims to the contrary, the MPAA penalizes films depicting
sex
but does
not
do
the
same for those that show
violence. In an interview, actress Maria Bello, who starred in The
Cooler,
recounts how she saw a horror movie where a woman's breast implant
was cut out with a
knife. That movie received an "R" rating. The Cooler originally
received an "NC17" rating because of a love scene that briefly
showed Bello's pubic hair.
The
MPAA will not allow previous ratings decisions to be used by filmmakers
to appeal the MPAA's decisions on
their film. So, you can have a situation where one movie -- American
Pie -- gets an "R" rating for showing a man masturbating with
a pie,
but a movie with a similar scene involving a female (and no pie)
can, and
did, receive
an "NC17" rating. That movie was called But I'm a Cheerleader and
wasn't made by a large studio. American Pie, however, was
made by Universal. Dick
employs Becky Altringer, a private investigator, to find out the names
of those who actually rate the films for the MPAA. Using various electronic
equipment and tried-and-true methods -- like digging through garbage
cans and following people -- she attempts to "out" the members
of the ratings board. The sequences documenting the investigation aren't
nearly as informative as the interviews with the filmmakers but they
do provide
some interesting
insight into who is actually behind the ratings. For example, all of
the raters have children but none seem to have children between the ages
of 5 and
17 -- the audience the ratings are intended to protect -- as
the MPAA
has stated.
In
the latter part of the film, Dick submits his own movie to the MPAA for
a rating. Unsurprisingly, it is deemed worth of an "NC17," mainly
due to the fact that it shows the scenes that caused other films to receive
"NC17" ratings. So, Dick documents the appeal process which
reveals even more unusual business practices including, but not limited
to, the fact that clergymen are part of the process.
If
you're at all interested in the film business, This Film is Not Yet
Rated is at once eye-opening and frustrating. The movie documents
the fact that independent filmmakers -- like Kirby Dick -- are subjected
to heavier
scrutiny than large studios and their films because
the studios actually have their hand in the entire process.
A lot
of what This Film is Not Yet Rated has to say isn't really new
information. All it takes is a look at your own DVD library to see that
most films
-- regardless of the rating -- tend to contain a fair amount of violence
and that violence is usually directed at women. The fact that the
MPAA and their secretive ratings board finds that type of content acceptable
but
frowns
upon sexual content isn't an earth-shattering revelation. What the documentary
succeeds at doing is revealing the utter hypocrisy of the MPAA
and their methods. For
that, I can only say, "It's about time."
Trivia: In
order for the film to be given an "R" rating in America, some scenes
of
Eyes Wide Open contain computer-generated people in the foreground
obscuring some of the more
explicit sexual action.
(Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |